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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, Mdforf, Or. Thursday, Aug. 27, 1959 MEDFORDo Trlbunb "Zvsryoo ia Southern Orecos Heads The Mail Tribune" Published Diily except Saturday bjr MJJDFIMD PRINTING CO 33 Norm rii ST Ph BP 2-611 ' ROBERT W RUHL, Editof HZRB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM Business ftfst ERIC W ILLZN JR Managing editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHAHD JTEWETf Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE ER1CKSON Circuiation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Zntered as second class matter at Medforrf Oregon under Act of March . 1197 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' By Mai In Advance Copy lOe Dall- and Sunday 1 year SIS 00 Daily and Sunday 0 mot 8-OC Daily and Sunday 3 mos 4.23 Sunday Only One year $4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland, Central Point. Eagle .Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er. Talent and on motor routes Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Daily and- Sunday 1 mo. 1-50 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c Ail Terms Casr in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official rape or Jacsatm ceanty United Press International Full Leased Wire " MZMBra or audIt burzau O CIRITJLATIOJ Advertisine Representative WIST HOLIDAY CO . WC Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco, Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland St. Lotus. At las's vaneower B C 23NNEW$PAPEI J5i i PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASftbcUTI Z7 U Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files ot Thi Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 27. 1949 (Saturday) Bliss Heine's Juniors are sponsoring the appearance soon of Charlie Barnett's fa mous band at the armory. Harold H. Corliss, 938 South Holly st., blames a fly and a wasp in his car for dis tracting him and causing an accident. 2a YEARS AGO Aug. 27. 1939 (Sunday) Dr. Robert W. Sleeter an nounces he will open an of fice in the Fluhrer building to practice here. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Great has been the war talk all the past week. Some got their news from the papers, some from the air, and some made up their own, as they went along. Thus, they were able to report the peace treaty was signed, before tha war started." 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 27. 1929 (Tuesday) Betty Jean Frey wins $5 for the best decorated doll buggy. . Central Point votes down a school bus proposal in a spe cial election. , 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 27. 1919 (Wednesday) The American Legion de clares war on Bolshevisks in Jackson county. . City police warn children not to run and yell during band concerts in the park. SO YEARS AGO Aug. 27. 1909 (Friday) A survey party sets out to finish worR for the F. and E. railroad. Word is received the Modoc orchard may be perpetuated and not subdivided into small tracts. What's Your I.Q.? Nina at ten correct fs superior; seven or eiyht is excellent; five ot sis is good. 1. All U.S. Senate commit tees have one more member from the majority party than from the minority party; true or false? 2. If the wind is blowing toward the north, which way does the arrow of the weather vane point? 3. What five States border on the Gulf of Mexico? 4. What do oil men mean by a "wildcat well"? 5. In bas-relief sculpture, are the figures raised or sunk en on the flat surface? ' What four letters of the English alphabet look the same forward, backward and upside down? ; 7. What three duplicated surnames are in the list of Presidents of the U. S.? 8. On the Lincoln penny, what kind of necktie is Abra ham Lincoln wearing? 9. Name the river boundary between the TJ. S. and Mexico. 10. The name of which month of the year has the most letters in it? Answers: 1. Falsa. (Select commiiees have an equal no. of each). 2. South. 3. Texas, La-, Miss., Ala., Fla. 4. One in an area not known to be productive. 5. Raised. 6. H, L O, X. 7. Adams, Harrison, Roosevelt. 8. Bow tie. 9. Rio Grande. 10. September. 1 Morgan on Party Politics Sometimes we think that Howard Morgan was (and is) the most Oregon politics in a long time. It will be recalled that he was a member of the House in 1949, and chairman of the Demo cratic party during the crucial years of 1952 to 1956 the time of the party's renaissance. Later he was public utilities commissioner under Gov. Robert Holmes. . Morgan has never minced words, never run away from a fight, and never failed to state his position with clarity and force. IN POLITICS, where there are many mealy- mouthed words, his vigor and bluntness come like a sniff of ocean air. Recently he addressed a meeting of the state central committee of his party. It went largely unnoticed in the daily press. The quotations below are for the edification of Republicans, Democrats and indepedents alike. His talk was a criticism of his party and a prescription for its health. . e QUOTE, in part: ". . . Prior to remedial measures taken in 1952, the (Democratic) party was fatally burdened by crooks, drunks, has-beens, never-wases and stumble-bums. Our party was not taken seriously by the voters in those days.. Too many of them knew that it served as an auxiliary to the Republican party, drawing its finan cial backing from moneyed Republicans, who thus guaranteed themselves a docile adversary which could be either defeated or managed . .' . "My job as state chairman . . . consisted mainly, then, of riding the bums out, recruiting first rate candidates and giving the public competing points of view to choose between. The merit of this approach shows in the election results . . . "The party is in danger ... of falling back into its old ways because certain of its elected representa tives in the Legislature are appeasing rather than competing with the opposition ..." MORGAN'S strongest criticisms were aimed at Walter Pearson, president of the Senate, but he also sniped at other unnamed members of the legislature. Then he goes on: "If people discover they're going to get conserva tives no matter which party they support, they'll vote for real conservatives Republicans rather than for carbon-copy conservatives. "The nature of politics is that it is a substitute for war the use of persuasion in place of armed force. The function of the opposing political sides is to provide competition. People like a fight and they are wise to do so, because lack of competition means sloppy government at best and corrupt government at worst ... "The Republican party has been far more respon sible to its philosophy and far more hard-working since it got whipped a few times. Democrats might have to learn this lesson the hard way, but they need .-' not if they will get busy now ... "There is only one reason to be a Democrat be cause, our party is for the people. All other reasons (memberships in good fellowship groups such as serv ice clubs, acceptance in high society, accumulating of business fortunes, etc.) impel people toward the Re publican party. If our party fails in its historic obliga tions to the people, there remains no reason why they should support us . . ." MORGAN then went on to offer his prescrip- tion for the party, which sounded remark ably like the program which he, as state chair man, instituted and fought for. It is, in many ways, a shame that he has now retired from active politics to ranching. Like him or dislike him, agree or not, it can not be denied that he is one of the more colorful and stimulating figures in Oregon's public life. And 1962 isn't far away! E.A. What About the Ditches? Last Friday near Ashland, a little boy toddled from his yard, tumbled down an embankment into an irrigation ditch, and drowned. The ditch was not fenced. Within Medford's city limits, there are at least three miles of un fenced irrigation ditches. There are also numerous unfenced drainage ditches, trickles in summer but potential torrents in wet months. And there is Bear creek. IN THE interests of 'public safety, the Medford city council last month passed an ordinance requiring that private swimming pools and fish ponds be fenced or otherwise enclosed. The ordinance was not, and could not be, extended to require fencing of irrigation district ditches. Nor do state regulations or other local laws require such fencing. But if the drowning of a little girl in a Eugene swimming pool June 13 brought home one dan ger, surely the drowning of the little boy near Ashland brings home another. . TMANY of the irrigation and drainage ditches 1T1 within Medford's city limits run through recently-annexed areas that are only now seeing concentrated residential development. As new houses spring up in these outlying subdivisions, more and more children are going to be playing or wandering near these ditches. The chances of tragedy will greatly increase. 1 While the ppol-fencing ordinance was before the city council, we questioned it on several counts. We believed, and we still believe, that swimming pool safeguards should be a moral re sponsibility of those who own the pools, rather than an expensive legal obligation. DUT if nothing is to be done about the city's " other water hazards, this ordinance becomes both a double blow to the pool owners and a half service to the public. t It is now the turn, and the moral responsi bility at least, of irrigation district officials and owners of property crossed or bounded by drain age ditches to consider positive steps. What about the ditches? E.W. refreshing thing to hit Dennis the Menace ...THE 01HER S0HAO ONE DOCKET? i see. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of tha writer although under certain circumstances the use ot a pen name or initia' for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often tha eao. More Clarification To the Editor: We should briefly reply to a letter from Mrs. Beulah Dusenberry con cerning a family that she said was refused aid by The Sal vation Army. After talking with Mrs. Dusenberry, we understand she personally had not talked with this family to find out if we had or had not helped them. Thus, her information was not complete in respect to aid they had received. Our records indicate that this family has received aid from The Salvation Army as far back as Dec. 2, 1958. This included meals and lodgings at our Shelter, some. 60 ar ticles of clothing from our clothing department, a Christ mas basket and grocery order. Also, they were referred to the welfare commission for transportation back to their legal residence of St. Louis, Mo. (which they refused). Due to insufficient funds we were unable to offer help to this family for the full year for them to establish legal residence in Oregon, nor are we in a position to pay doctor fees or hospital ex penses. As a private agency our funds are limited, but, it can not be said that all aid was refused this family of eight. We welcome any inquiry concerning any family - that is in need as we keep com plete records as to the aid that is given. By calling SP 3-7335, we would share this information with those in terested. Thank you for helping us to make this information available to those who may have wondered about this situation after reading Mrs. Dusenberry's letter. Captain Wm. Ricken, Commanding Officer, Salvation Army, Medford. Strange Values To the Editor: Perhaps there has already been too much publicly written about the lady whose desperate sit uation Mrs. Dusenberry de scribed in Tuesday's Tribune. It does, however, seem unfair to let yesterday's (Wednes day) summary of the case by a Red Cross worker pass with out a brief comment. I have seen the woman, I have talked to her and she is, I hope, my friend. Doesn't it take some special brand of raw courage to hold together a family of six little children to feed, clothe and love them dearly when there is no income of any kind ex cept from the generosity of a few neighbors? Doesn't it take a little resourcefulness when one is eight months pregnant, without electricity because the bill wasn't paid and no food is in the house, to keep hope fully planning a future? Isn't there anything special at all about a woman who can make one bed and one blanket do for five children and still thank the human race for the bed and the blanket? It is true as stated that she was offered a ticket to Mis souri some months ago before all aid to her was cut off. But other things are also true. Had she made the trip with her six little children it would have been on the very general unspecified assurance that "somebody back there would look "after them," it would have left behind 2000 miles the husband and father they love, and it would have, she sincerely believes, risked the life of her unborn child. May be she should have gone. I'm not prepared to judge. Much has been said about various agencies and what should have been dona or wga, weU pay for tub conn, OUT Or YXR SAPOEJ .. . " shouldn't have been done, but vindictiveness can only be de structive and there is a more important thing to consider. Namely, her future. We live in a world charac terized by some strange sets of values, but let us hope that here in our Centennial year we wiU be remembered for the covered wagon trek from Missouri to Oregon and not as the people who used the weapon of starvation to force an innocent woman to make the return trip. Good people live in this valley. Some have come forth to help this woman who are hard pressed for means of their own. Others, unfortun ately, seem to forget just what it is the Bible says composes the kingdom of Heaven. But practically all who have met her think she is a very gal lant lady ... and we hope she stays. Jane Gillaspie 636 West Fourth st. Medford. Medford Praised .To the Editor: I wish to con gratulate Medford on its fine parks and attractive business district street trees. During a recent drive through Medford I noted the clever use of a motor scooter to haul quick coupler sprink lers to speed up the work of irrigating large park areas. I noticed how organizations con tribute gifts to Medford parks. It was very much in evi dence that Medford is pro gressive and has real com munity pride. Merritt A. Nelson, Director, Redding Recreation and Parks Redding, Calif. What About "Exchanges"? To the Editor: Your editor ial, Mail Tribune, Aug. 25, 1959. About Senator McCarthy we feel a need' to be brief. You, as a newspaper man, have aligned yourself with that group which has poured upon the people of this coun try a flood of material con demning McCarthy, the MAN. But for nine years the idea of infiltration of our govern ment of subversive individu als, whose sole purpose is the complete destruction of our American Way of Govern ment, has been avoided. For now, suffice it to say there exists a wealth of evidence to prove the stand taken by Senator McCarthy. We, as ra tional brings must at least investigate both sides of the case. Again briefly, for now, your criticism of American Mercury, and McCarthy, has been conspicuous in the ab sence of one word. And that word is truth. Why? Now, then,, some words about your comments on athe istic communism. Your . rea sons for declaring commu nism dangerous must remain wholly inadequate because "manpower, submarines, new land-based weapons, H-bombs and the missiles to deliver them," are only some of the means used by the Soviets. Except for H-bombs and the missiles to deliver them, the other means were used in part to conquer most of the back ward nations, and it is be cause of the fact, as you say, Americans are made of "stern er stuff," that the Soviets have had to employ other, new means. They are trying to gain control of men's minds. May we point out here that Russian communism is more dangerous if we contin ue to choose to be ignorant of it in all its false ramifica tions. And now, in regards to your 'Foul Balls' in Uniform Constitute One Of America's Big Problems Overseas Tokyo-tCPD-TJ-S. Servicemen stationed overseas perform a vital duty for their country. But sometimes they can be America's worst ambassadors. In most countries, particu larly in Asia, there is little quarrel on the higher level over stationing of troops in a nation, either as "defense" forces or as a military ad visory group training that na tion's troops. Most responsible leaders recognize the service these U.S. troops perform and the reason for it. Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop EN ROUTE TO VIENTIENE Washington - These words are written amid the bustle and confusion of homely ' I things that al ways rise, in any house hold, when a long journey has to be pre pared. This reporter is off to Laos, to have a look at the new 4ot-ph AlsnD - 111 aggression there. Since this country has been fed so long on patented, government-issued tranquilizers, the trouble in Laos has as yet caused hardly a ripple. Maybe the aggression will soon be repelled, although it seems more likely that the key city of Sam Neua will soon turn into another Dien Bien Phu. In any case, what one will see in Laos probably wUl not be dramatic, if only because look ing for jungle-fighting in those particular jungles is usuaUy far worse than searching a haystack for a needle. Nonetheless, just as a symp tom, this trouble in Laos is really dramatically serious. It is bad enough as a symptom of what the future may hold in store in Asia. It is very much worse a symptom of the ill- concealed contempt for the strength and will of the Unit ed states and its President that is plainly felt by the Presi dent's prospective guest, Nik ita S. Khrushchev. rD prove this shocking point, a comparison offered in a previous report may perhaps be repeated. In brief, when Khrushchev first wanted a meeting with President Eisen hower, in 1955, he willingly paid for the meeting with the liberation of Austria and the restoration of normal rela tions with Yugoslavia. This time, threats to Berlin have got Khrushchev what he has always wanted most of all-an invitation to meet along with the President, with no bother some allies at the table. And this time, the invitation to meet was hardly extended by Eisenhower, when the Com munist attack on Laos was launched with Khrushchev's blessing. What, then, is the explana tion of this enormous and om inous change in the manners and methods of our enemy? In part, perhaps, the explanation lies in Khrushchev's consoli dation of his personal power. Yet even in 1955, he needed very great personal power, in order to persuade Vyacheslav Molotov and the other Stalin ists to agree to the ostenta tiously "peaceful" Austrian and Yugoslav gambits. Nine-tenths of the explana tion of the change in Khrush chev must therefore lie else where. It lies, beyond doubt, in the massive, unfavorable shift in the East-West balance of power that has occurred since 1953. In the Kremlin, the prevailing estimate of the power-balance is always the mainspring of policy. Nothing less than a great change in this Kremlin estimate can ex plain the great change in Khrushchev. THE stark fact of the change in the power balance is almost unbelievable under statement . . . "It (commu nism) is dangerous in its sometimes-successful attempts to infiltrate and take over other countries." Since the end of World War II the total number of human beings liv ing under the Soviet commu nistic yoke of slavery has swelled to nearly 900,000,000 souls. At this rate Mr. Allen, they could soon own the world (their avowed goal), and they won't have to be successful many more times Robert J. Howard, 828 B, West 14th ;st., Medford. INVESTMENT HEAD DIES San Francisco-flJPD-Charles R. Blyth, 76, head of the na tionwide investment firm bearing his name, died Wed nesday night. Founded here in 1914, the company now has 24 offices throughout the nation. It is on the lower, person nel level where the trouble comes. Let a U.S. serviceman get in a drunken brawl, rob a taxi, assault a woman or get Washington Report By WILLIAM HALLECK'S AVAILABILITY Washington - Charlie Hal- leck's story is the Republi can success story of this year and of this . y J session of l Congress. It has now also become the story of a man openly in search, 12 years later, of a Republican Vice P r e s i dential nom ination which until the bitter end he had believed was his in 1948. IU would have been, as it turned out, a poor prize then. For 1948 was the year Harry S. Truman confounded poll sters, pundits and his the oretically unbeatable oppon ent, Thomas E. Dewey, and House. The Dewey running mate, chosen after Halleck thought he had it in the bag, was Earl Warren, now Chief Justice of the United States. Still it is a prize Halleck now seeks for 1960, and in the most unabashed way. He has let it be known that he would be happy to take second place on the 1960 Re publican ticket no matter who hedHs it, Vice President Rich ard Nixon or Gov. Nelson Rockef eUer of New York. You can't, as the politicians say, eet more "available" than that. TEP. CHARLES A. HAL LECK is. the hard-nosed, iron-fisted product of the touch and exceedingly realis tic politics of Indiana. He is not one to deny his own vir tues as a politician - which in truth are very considerable, Nor is he one to hang about and unduly defer to others. At the opening of this con gress Halleck grew tired of the heretofore unavoidable waiting on the aged Rep Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Mass aehusetts to step down as House GOP floor leader. So HaUeck simply moved in. He organized an anti-Martin re bellion - a revolt in which the avowed "neutrality" of the White House amounted to a pro-HaUeck position. And he ousted "Old Joe"" who went down fighting with a daily drowned, in this coun try, in floods of official soothing-syrup. Less than a year ago, the then-Secretary of the Navy was happily denying that there were any indica tions of Soviet missile-launching submarines. Now Adm. Arleigh Burke has announced that the Soviets are building a serious force of these ves sels. Our "Polaris" submarines, Adm. Burke added, will of cdurse surpass the Soviet sub marines when we finally get them-several years from now. The admiral did not add that the program that could have given us extremely useful missile-launching submarines now was cancelled because of the administration's budget mania. But Khrushchev then glee fuUy boasted with all the po liteness of an oncoming house guest, that the new Soviet un derwater craft, which he has now, would cover any target in the United States from the waters of Hudson's Bay. By the same token, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, Gen. Nathan Twining, was telling all and sundry only a few months ago that the Soviets probably did not have a true intercontinental ballistic missile, because no Soviet ICBM had been tested at fuU range. With his usual hearty bluffness, Gen. Twin ing brushed aside the scien tists' warnings that the Sovi ets were using special instru mentation to test their ICBM's over reduced ranges. These recent ugly surprises for the administration's pro fessional (one might even say careerist) optimists by no means convey the true extent of the shift in the world power balance. It would take a book to tell that story in full. It is an ominous but not yet quite fatal story-a story of diminution of our striking power and weakening of our deterrent, balanced by Soviet gains in the same crucial areas. Much can yet be done to give this story a better end ing than now seems likely. But if Berlin and Laos mean anything, they mean that the needed action should not be delayed for another year, or another month, or even an other day. (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. William 8- K'hlta involved in any numerous other scrapes with Asians and the "Yankee go home" spirit gets stronger. Latest Incident Latest incident of this type S. WHITE melancholy gallantry but with far too little support from colleagues who owed him much. This was a typically harsh, candid Halleck thrust. But even those who took no pleasure in it are now bound to admit it probably was a good thing for the GOP, even if a cruel thing to Martin. Martin as a party leader was faithful to his party, yes; but more faithful to the House as an institution. He could rarely bring himself to be lieve that victory over the Democrats, on any and every issue, was his highest reason for being. . CHARLIE HALLECK has never been troubled by such philosophic hesitations. Once he joined the group of Republican C o n g r e ssional leaders who meet weekly with the President, it was plain that something very new had been added. Martin used to go to the White House and return to the Capitol in total calm. Halleck goes down breathing fire against the Democrats and returns hurl ing large chunks of brimstone at their heads. Beyond doubt he has put partisan' steel into the spines of the House Republicans. Be yond much doubt, his example of eager partisan combative ness has often stiffened the President himself. The wide use of the Presidential veto during the current session is partly . attributable to Hal leck's urgings. The recent Rfr publican victory for a "tough' labor bill in the House was largely his victory. While he has stirred both the "downtown," or Admin istration, Republicans and those at the Capitol, he has also moved partly to nullify the large House Democratic majority. -This he has ac complished by a series of coalitions with Old Guard Southern Democrats. These have gone along with Charlie on several issues spending and labor among them and Charlie may be expected to do them no great harm oh issues like civil rights. 1ITHEN HaUeck was put into " the leadership by bump ing Martin it was widely said among his backers that he would be "more liberal" than "Old Joe," who is 74. This, as the saying goes, was a laugh, indeed. For Charlie himself, at 58, is scarcely a very young Re publican - this short, heavy, compact, lined-faced Midwest- erner. At heart he is a stncUy Old Guard Republican who is willing to bend a bit when party necessity demands a more liberal stance. He is not, therefore, more "forward-looking" than Mar tin; .he is simply a brilliant, if somewhat cynical, combat leader in a party which has few of such as these. This quality, if he gains the Vice Presidential nomination, would be his real contribution to the GOP ticket. (Copyright, 1959, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) AT oil from tlx Couclhous FRANK MORGAN - HAROLD SNODGRASS, FUNERAURCTOtS DAY OR NIGHT came in Japan where a U.S. Air Force officer was accused of entering a house while drunk and raping a 32-year-old housemaid. ' This was an incident' that a certain segment of the press relishes. r - i Whether the officer did or did 'not rape the woman and . whether he wUl even be for mally charged was beside the point. - : To millions of Japanese. the officer is guilty. News papers have already quoted the alleged victim as calling him a "beast" whom' she could never forgive. The result-a drop in U.S. prestige.- Numerous Shootings Occur in Korea, hardly a week goes by without a report of the shooting of a Korean by American troops. Most' of these have developed from at tempted thefts by Koreans at U.S. installations. But even thoueh thefts have been involved, there has been criticism of trigger-happy U.S. servicemen for shoot ing first and thinking after wards. If a man is fleeing, whv shoot? And if the guard has to shoot, why shoot to kill, is the Asian view. In the Philippines there is a current controversv over the alleged "murder" of Fili pinos who were shot and kill ed when they attempted to escape after being caught pU fering at the U.S. Clark Air Force Base. The pilferers actuallv were shot by Filipino guards hired by the Air Force. But this fact is glossed over v Arnr. ica's critics who blame the Air Force. Spends Billions Aiding ' The United States has spent billions of , dollars in Asia since the end of World War II in an attempt to better the life of the area's people. But one irresponsible act by one serviceman can5 de stroy the benefits that thou sands of others worked for. One basic trouble is that too many youthful servicemen still retain the "gook" com plex that once was prevalent among U.S. servicemen , in Asia. Too many servicemen, many too young to have fought in World War. II or in the Korean War, look down on the people in the nation to which they are posted. A Classic Example .A classic example of 'the service man who seriously damaged relations between his country and the people of an Asian nation was Wil liam S. Girard, the soldier who shot and killed a Japa nese woman" on a U.S. firing range. This one action' brought Japanese opinion of America to one of its lowest points since World War n. It is the Communists who greet such incidents ,with glee. Communist China's New China News Agency, in. its broadcasts ' beamed to Asian points, takes great delight in giving its listeners reports, usually slanted, about the Americans in Japan, Oki nawa, Formosa or the Philip pines. They are usually ac companied by another de mand for U.S. troops to f get out of Asia. Asians say that the U.S. government, like most Ameri cans, wants to be liked and to be respected and perhaps works too hard at it. But it's a difficult ' desire to achieve with foul balls in uniforms walking around. 1 . .T It's tchats leti'id our name that makes 9 - eretice PHONE SP 2-8030